A healthy relationship means that both members of the couple are…
1. Communicating
with each other: Talking about problems without screaming and shouting;
listening to each other, and respecting their viewpoint; being willing
to adapt and to sometimes change their mind.
2. Showing
respect for one another: Valuing the other person’s culture, beliefs,
viewpoints, opinions and boundaries. Also, treating each other in a kind
and caring way.
3. Demonstrating
and conveying trust: Each person is trustworthy and trusts the other
person – because they have been shown that they are worthy of that
trust.
4. Honest
with each other: Both are open and honest – but are private as well;
and they don’t demand the other person tells them everything.
5. Equals: They make joint decisions and treat each other well. No person calls the shots or determines all the rules.
6. Able
to enjoy their own personal space: As well as spending time together,
they spend time on their own. They’re respect the fact they’re
different, and they need their own life, too.
7. Decisions
about sex are discussed, and are consensual: They discuss sex together,
including birth control. There’s no one individual sets the rules and
standards here.
Signs of an unhealthy relationship
An unhealthy relationship develops where one, or both, of the partners is…
1. Failing
to communicate: Problems are ignored, or not talked about at all. One
or both don’t really listen, and they rarely compromise.
2. Acting
in ways that are disrespectful: One or both are inconsiderate toward
the other person; and they don’t behave in ways that send the message
that they care.
3. Refusing
to trust the other person: One or both is suspicion of their partner’s
loyalty. Hence, they make false accusations, or won’t believe the truth.
4. Acting in a way that is dishonest: One or both is deceptive, or they lie and hide the truth.
5. Acting
in a controlling way: One person thinks that they should set the one
who rules, controls the other person, and say how things should be.
6. Beginning
to feel squashed and smothered / cutting themselves off from friends
and family: One partner is possessive, or feels threatened and upset,
when the other’s with their family or spends time with their friends.
7. Attempting
to pressurise the other into sexual activity / refusing to talk openly
about birth control: One partner wants the other to participate in sex,
or to engage in different practices against that’s person’s will. Or,
one of the partners stops using birth control, or expects the other
person to “take care of all that.”
Signs of an abusive relationship
An abusive relationship develops when one of the parties…
1. Starts
to communicate in ways that are abusive: When arguments occur, one of
the partners screams and cusses, or they verbally threaten or attack the
other person.
2. Shows
disrespect through acting in abusive ways: This is where one of the
partners abuse, harms or threatens the physical safety of the other
individual.
3. Wrongly
accuses their partner of flirting or cheating: One of the partners is
convinced – with no real grounds – that their partner is cheating or
having an affair. Thus, they lash out verbally, or hurt, the accused
partner.
4. Refuses
to accept responsibility for the abuse: When they fly into a rage or
act in ways that are abusive, they miminise their actions and refuse to
accept blame. They may even blame their partner for “causing the abuse.”
5. Starts
to control the other partner: One partner has no say as the other sets
the rules – and arguing against that simply leads to more abuse.
6. Does
what they can to isolate their partner: One partner has control of who
the other person sees, the way they spend their time – and, even,
clothes they buy and wear. Thus, they start to lose their confidence and
personality.
7. Forces
sexual activity: The frequency, type and circumstances for sex are
determined by one partner – and the other must comply. If they don’t
acquiesce it leads to violence or abuse. Also, sometimes violence is
included in the sex.
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